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Driftwood Regular
Joined: 13 Nov 2009
Online Status: Offline Posts: 230
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Posted: 20 Dec 2009 at 18:29 | IP Logged
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Inspired wrote:
I know what you mean, and I had the bulk of my interviews on campus. Once your an Alumni they don't care about you.
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OK, so...how does attending another school's career fair help you get interviews? You usually have to submit your resume online through the respective school's career site to get on-campus interviews, regardless of the career fair. Are you just saying someone can get off-campus interviews by going to the career fair?
I know what you mean about the employers not caring about alumni. Often, this fact isn't even a secret as someone's year in school or status as an alumnus can preclude that person from even being allowed to submit a resume. For instance, a posting may specify that it wants people graduating between Dec 2009 and May 2010. Is this why you're considering going for the MACC?
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Driftwood Regular
Joined: 13 Nov 2009
Online Status: Offline Posts: 230
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Posted: 20 Dec 2009 at 18:36 | IP Logged
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Donald11 wrote:
I've heard similar things on other forums, primarily the MBA forum at the Business Week website, so it is likely true that companies with no open positions are attending career fairs.
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Oh, the career fairs are a given in my opinion. I was actually going further than that and saying that some firms may even be holding on-campus interviews without actual positions available.
Again, I don't have any proof of that fact, but I have encountered it in the corporate world before. I've even had interviewers tell me they were just interviewing me for future reference without an actual job in mind for me, but these were not on-campus interviews and had nothing to do with campus recruiting. I just wondered if it might extend to campus recruiting, too.
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Driftwood Regular
Joined: 13 Nov 2009
Online Status: Offline Posts: 230
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Posted: 20 Dec 2009 at 18:42 | IP Logged
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By the way Donald, you mentioned you take online classes from a school in Washington. Can you not use that school's career website to look for on-campus jobs, particularly if you plan to maybe move there someday anyway? Obviously, that would present problems when you get ready to interview, as you're currently on the other side of the country, but I just wondered if your school even had an actual campus, and especially with a good career center, which has regular visits from larger firms.
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Inspired Major Contributor
Joined: 01 Nov 2009
Online Status: Offline Posts: 1162
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Posted: 20 Dec 2009 at 19:48 | IP Logged
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Driftwood wrote:
Inspired wrote:
I know what you mean, and I had the bulk of my interviews on campus. Once your an Alumni they don't care about you.
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I know what you mean about the employers not caring about alumni. Often, this fact isn't even a secret as someone's year in school or status as an alumnus can preclude that person from even being allowed to submit a resume. For instance, a posting may specify that it wants people graduating between Dec 2009 and May 2010. Is this why you're considering going for the MACC?
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Not just employer's, but your darn school doesn't care.
I said this before: The other options are to keep applying to these crappy bookkeeping
jobs, applying to firms/govt with a glimmer of hope that they bring you in for an interview, doing nothing (by not doing the Macc), or become a electrician or
nurse.
I have my reasons, but I am considering going back to the Macc to meet the recruiters.
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Donald11 Major Contributor
Joined: 14 Sep 2009
Online Status: Offline Posts: 481
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Posted: 20 Dec 2009 at 21:03 | IP Logged
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Driftwood wrote:
By the way Donald, you mentioned you take online classes from a school in Washington. Can you not use that school's career website to look for on-campus jobs, particularly if you plan to maybe move there someday anyway? Obviously, that would present problems when you get ready to interview, as you're currently on the other side of the country, but I just wondered if your school even had an actual campus, and especially with a good career center, which has regular visits from larger firms. |
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I'm enrolled in Washington State University, which has just as much of a campus as Harvard and Princeton do. In fact, according to the literautre put out by the accounting department ( http://www.business.wsu.edu/academics/Accounting/Documents/f actsheet.pdf ), their graduates have accepted jobs at the Big 4 and the regional firms. So I am conviced they are a reputale school. Even though I am willing to move to WA, I only want to do so if it is for a full time, perment position.
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